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In 1938, kindergarten teacher Helen Hulick was more comfortable wearing slacks to court, but this would not do for Judge Arthur S. Guerin. Hulick, who came to court to testify against two men accused of burglarizing her house, repeatedly turned up to proceedings in slacks until she was held in contempt of court and sent to jail by the judge. The issue began on Nov. 9, 1938, in a courtroom in downtown Los Angeles, as reported by the Los Angeles Times archival account of the incident. Hulick, who was 28 years old at the time, arrived in court wearing slacks, at which point Guerin postponed the hearing, telling her to come back wearing a dress. Hulick was quoted in the 1938 issue of the Los Angeles Times saying: You tell the judge I will stand on my rights. If he orders me to change into a dress I won’t do it. I like slacks. They’re comfortable. She returned on Nov. 15, 1938, and the judge once again reprimanded her. According to the Los Angeles Times archives: Guerin’s anti-slackism continued the next day when Hulick returned in slacks and he held her in contempt of court, giving her a five-day sentence and sending her to jail. According to the Los Angeles Times, after being divested of her favorite garment by a jail matron and attired in a prison denim dress, Miss Hulick was released on her own recognizance after her attorney, William Katz, obtained a writ of habeas corpus and declared he would carry the matter to the Appellate Court. According to a New York Daily News story from 1938, Hulick was only held in jail for a few hours. Hundreds of letters were sent to the courthouse protesting this sentencing. The Appellate Court overturned Guerin’s contempt citation during a habeas corpus hearing, and Hulick was free to wear slacks to court. However, she returned for a follow-up to the courthouse in January 1939 in a dress, described in the UCLA library’s Los Angeles Times Photographic Collection as chic feminine attire.
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